Homelessness
by Crystal Harvey, M.A., Doctoral candidate at the Massachusetts School of Professional Psychology
The number of families with children experiencing homelessness is increasing at an alarming rate. In October, 2008, in in Massachusetts alone, 2, 472 families were living in shelters provided by the MA Department of Transitional Assistance (DTA) including 4,413 children and youth. Additionally, approximately 1,000 children and youth are temporarily housed in domestic violence shelters, substance abuse shelters, and HIV/AIDS shelters. These numbers are conservative considering families denied access to shelters and those who may be living in a motel room, car, or campground are not considered in these statistics.
Resource Organizations » Homelessness
31 listing(s), including 3 with hotlines and 1 offering support groups
In Massachusetts
Organizations with hotlines
Elizabeth Freeman Center
A 24 hour a day, seven day a week emergency response hotline with counselors available to accompany victims to hospitals, police stations and safety;
A confidential and secure residential shelter with in-house support services;
Individual counseling, and safety planning at EFC sites and off site;
Support groups;
Economic, housing and general advocacy and assistance;
Legal advocacy on-site in the county courts who assist victims to obtain 209A restraining orders and other necessary services;
Organizations without hotlines
Bedford VA Medical Center - Crescent House
Berkshire Community Action Council (BCAC)
Berkshire Housing Development Corp.
Birthday Wishes
Boston Centers for Youth & Families (BCYF)
Boston College Legal Assistance Bureau
Boston Health Care for the Homeless
Over the last 24 years, BHCHP has evolved into the largest and most comprehensive health care for the homeless program in the country. Our success as a national model results from: the commitment of talented professionals and clinicians; a strong record of responsible financial stewardship; a network of public and private community partnerships; and a willingness to take reasonable risks to pursue our mission.
Bridge Over Troubled Waters
Bridge's Street Outreach Program visits areas where street youths gather each day, intervenes in the lives of runaways and homeless youths, and offers alternatives to street life and substance abuse. The program's runaway services attempt to reconcile families of runaways by facilitating stronger family relationships or arranging stable alternative living situations when family reunification is not an option. The family life center promotes successful parenting skills to pregnant and parenting teenagers; offers counseling to parents on educational, employment, and child care needs; and helps mothers to earn their GED. Child care is also provided. The residential component provides homeless youths and single parents with affordable, supportive housing; counseling; stress and time management skills; support for completing a high school education; and experience in performing daily housekeeping as well as working at a paying job.
Additional services include a free medical van, a medical/dental program, licensed outpatient substance abuse counseling, an education/preemployment program, and an AIDS/HIV program.
BRIK (Building Resilience in Kids)
Center for Family Assistance
Community Teamwork Inc.
Vision: CTI will be an advocate and catalyst for systemic change on issues that affect low-income people, including education, workforce training, housing, economic development, and civic engagement.
COMPASS for Homeless Families
The COMPASS for homeless families Community College Collaborative helps single mothers in family shelters develop their abilities to reach individualized, self-sufficiency goals for work, community and home, via a coordinated program of Community College based education and support services, critical information and long-term coaching.
Construct
Crittenton Women's Union
Family Support Services: Our Early Education, FLASH, and Healthy Families programs support at-risk families as they move towards self-sufficiency through parenting education, early literacy, and health and wellness support.
Housing: We offer emergency and transitional housing as well as permanent housing search and placement to homeless families.
CTI: Division of Housing and Homeless Services
As a member of the Mass Non-Profit Housing Association and one of nine regional non-profit housing agencies in the state, CTI offers rental assistance programs, homeless prevention programs, transitional housing for domestic violence victims, shelters for homeless families, home-ownership opportunities, housing advocacy and self-sufficiency initiatives throughout 43 cities and towns in Massachusetts so that families are able to live in safe and affordable housing.
Friend of the Needy
HomeBASE Housing Program for Homeless Families
Homeless Shelter Directory
Horizons for Homeless Children
House of Hope
Services provided by House of Hope, Lowell:
Emergency food, shelter and clothing for 23 families.
Case Managers work with HOH residents to assess their circumstances and plan for their futures.
Health services are provided by a nurse practitioner who conducts a well-family clinic. Medications are monitored, immunization records initiated, diagnosis explained; and the nurse acts as a liaison/advocate between the family and the doctor.
On-site mental health and substance abuse programming for all mothers.
Employment internship positions are available on-site for adult residents who have little prior success with employment.
Children's services at the House of Hope cover a wide spectrum of outreach and support. Intervention, engagement and love are the operative words when it comes to the kids of House of Hope.
Lenox Housing Authority
Mass Coalition for the Homeless
MassResources
Middlesex Human Service Agency, Inc.
Programs include substance abuse recovery homes, inpatient alcohol education & treatment for adults convicted of two or more OUI offenses, shelter, food, & housing search assistance for the homeless.
Pine Street Inn
Short Stop
In addition to housing, participants receive a range of supportive services designed to promote participant self-sufficiency through skill building, permanency planning and supportive relationships.
Our mission is based on the premise that every young person deserves a safe and supportive place to live in order to develop his or her potential as an individual and member of the greater community.
St. Mary's Center for Women and Children
Stockbridge Housing Authority
Business hours: Monday - Friday, 9 a.m. - 2 p.m.
Outside Massachusetts
Organizations with hotlines
National Runaway Switchboard
Nineline
Additional Sources of Information
- My Personal Life Story About Being Homeless, a guided activity workbook to treat traumatized homeless children and recently homeless children living in transitional housing. From the Children's Psychological Health Center, Inc., a non-profit agency in San Francisco.
Disclaimer: Material on the MSPP INTERFACE Referral Service website is intended as general information. It is not a recommendation for treatment, nor should it be considered medical or mental health advice. The MSPP INTERFACE Referral Service urges families to discuss all information and questions related to medical or mental health care with a health care professional.
News About Homelessness
- Young social entrepreneur to tackle the taboo of homelessness, by PRWEB UK. July 19, 2012.
- Homelessness: Cheaper to Fix Than to Let Fester, by James, Charley. July 19, 2012.
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